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[0:Adrianne Calvo]
 (born in Chicago, Illinois) is an American chef, author, and television personality.

[0:Calvo]
 was voted one of the top 10 up-and-coming chefs in the state of Florida and 
[0:_]
 was the youngest president of FCCLA. 
[0:she]
 competed in a National Pastry Competition held by Johnson &amp; Wales University and 
[0:_]
 received the bronze medal without any formal training. 
[0:she]
 enrolled at Johnson &amp; Wales College of Culinary Arts in North Miami in 2002, and 
[0:_]
 entered more than forty national competitions, receiving first place in ten of the competitions and runner-up in all the rest. In 2003, 
[0:Calvo]
 won Taste Down Under, an Australian culinary competition. 
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 winning dish was served at a dinner for the United Nations and its ambassadors, making 
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 the youngest person to cook for the United Nations. 
[0:she]
 also catered the 2003 World Series for the champion Florida Marlins. In 2004, 
[0:she]
 won Taste Down Under again, and 
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 dish was served to CNN correspondents and representatives from Gourmet, Food Network, and Bon Appétit. After graduating from Johnson &amp; Wales, 
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 became the youngest chef to work at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, a five-diamond restaurant. 
[0:she]
 has appeared on NBC and The Montel Williams Show. In 2006, after the death of 
[1:her younger sister]
 to cancer, 
[0:Calvo]
 partnered with St. Jude's Children's Hospital to set up "Young Chefs Cooking for a Cure."

In April 2007, 
[0:Calvo]
 opened 
[0:her]
 restaurant "Chef Adrianne's Vineyard and Wine Bar" in Miami, Florida. 
[0:she]
 is also the author of a cookbook collection called Maximum Flavor, and 
[0:_]
 has created an accompanying culinary product line, Maximum Flavor Essentials, through 
[0:her]
 company, Terra Dolci Corporation.
<hr/>

[0:Bethenny Frankel]
 (born c. December 1970) is a natural foods chef and 
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 is currently on The Real Housewives of New York City on Bravo. 
[0:she]
 was a finalist on The Apprentice: Martha Stewart.

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 is daughter of 
[1:thoroughbred race horse trainer Bobby Frankel]
[1:who]
 is a member of the National Racing Hall of Fame, inducted in 1995, and 
[1:_]
 is multiple Eclipse Award winner.

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 was once a hotwalker for 
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 stable and 
[0:_]
 spent every summer at Saratoga Springs, New York for racing.
<hr/>

[0:Chef Clyde Serda]
 (born July 3, 1952) is an American chef and writer. Well known in the industry as “Chef Clyde” 
[0:he]
 has been a writer for The Culinarian Magazine for over thirteen years. 
[0:he]
 has worked at some of the most successful restaurants in the nation including Commanders Palace, New Orleans and The World Trade Club, San Francisco as well as owned and operated one of the most prestigious catering businesses in the San Francisco, Bay Area Simply Outrageous Catering. Over the years 
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 has written several articles in the culinary field as well as appeared on TV spots and published many recipes. 
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 has worked on the Board of Directors for the Chef Association of the Pacific Coast and 
[0:_]
 has served as a past President for two terms.

Currently 
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 is working as a Food Consultant / Corporate Chef for Arnabal International. 
[0:he]
 also works as a private chef instructor and culinary event coordinator. Also 
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 is a Certified Master Food Taster for Chefs Best. 
[0:he]
 is a member of the Culinary Advisement Board for Job Corp Treasure Island. 
[0:he]
 has published 
[0:his]
 first cook book “Just the Cook” and 
[0:_]
 has been working on 
[0:his]
 second cook book “History in the Eating.”
<hr/>

[0:David Carmichael]
 is an American chef, specializing in pastry. Born and raised in New York, 
[0:he]
 has run several pastry kitchens in many of Manhattan’s finest restaurants. 
[0:he]
 currently works at Gilt restaurant, situated in the New York Palace Hotel.
<hr/>

[0:Eddie Matney]
 is an American host chef, restaurateur, and television personality. 
[0:he]
 is currently the owner and executive chef of Eddie's House in Paradise Valley, Arizona. 
[0:he]
 and 
[0:his]
 family previously lived in Phoenix, Arizona.
<hr/>

[0:Edouard Alexandre de Pomiane]
, sometimes Edouard Pozerski (20 April 1875 - 26 January 1964) was a French scientist, radio broadcaster and food writer.

[1,2:his parents]
 emigrated from Poland in 1863, changed 
[1,2:their]
 name from Pozerski to de Pomiane, and 
[1,2:_]
 became French citizens.

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 worked as a physician at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, where 
[0:he]
 gave 
[3:Félix d'Herelle]
 a place to work on bacteriophages.

[0:his]
 best known works to have been translated into English are Cooking in Ten Minutes and Cooking with Pomiane. 
[0:his]
 writing was remarkable in its time for its directness (
[0:he]
 frequently uses a strange second-person voice, telling you--the reader--what you are seeing and smelling as you follow a recipe) and for 
[0:his]
 general disdain for "traditional" elaborate French cuisine. 
[0:he]
 travelled widely and quite a few of 
[0:his]
 recipes are from abroad. 
[0:his]
 recipes often take pains to demystify cooking by explaining the chemical processes at work.
<hr/>

[0:Gavin Kaysen]
 (born 1979 in Thousand Oaks, California) is executive chef at 
[1:noted French chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud's]
 New York City restaurant, Cafe Boulud.

[0:he]
 previously headed the kitchen at El Bizcocho in San Diego. In 2007, 
[0:he]
 represented America at the Bocuse d'Or. 
[0:he]
 was a competitor on The Next Iron Chef, eliminated during the third challenge, ‘Resourcefulness’.
<hr/>

[0:Guy Martin]
 (born November 4 1981 in Kirmington, England) is a British motorcycle racer.
<hr/>

[0:Ilan D. Hall]
 (born April 6, 1982) is an American chef, best known as the winner of the second season of the Bravo television network's reality series Top Chef.

[0:Hall]
 is a native of Great Neck, New York. 
[1,2:his parents]
 were both immigrants: 
[1:his father]
 from Scotland, and 
[2:his mother]
 from Israel.

As a teenager, 
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 worked at Marine Fishery, a seafood store in 
[0:his]
 hometown of Great Neck and 
[0:_]
 was later trained at Italy's Lorenzo de Medici Apicus Program and at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA). 
[0:he]
 attended the CIA at the same time as 
[3:his Top Chef runner-up]
[3:Marcel Vigneron]
. At the time of 
[0:his]
 season two Top Chef competition, 
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 was a line cook at Casa Mono, a Spanish restaurant in Manhattan.

[0:Hall]
 currently lives in Los Angeles.
<hr/>

[0:Joël Robuchon]
 (born 7 April 1945 in Poitiers, France) is a French chef and restaurateur. 
[0:he]
 was titled "Chef of the Century" by the guide Gault Millau in 1989 and also awarded the Meilleur Ouvrier de France (France's Best Craftsman) in cuisine in 1976. 
[0:he]
 has published several cookbooks in French, two of which have been translated into English, 
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 has chaired the committee for the current edition of the Larousse Gastronomique, and 
[0:_]
 has hosted a culinary television show in France. 
[0:he]
 operates more than a dozen restaurants in cities worldwide, including Hong Kong, Las Vegas, London, Macau, Monaco, New York City, Paris, and Tokyo, with a total of 17 Michelin Guide stars among them - the most of any chef in the world.
<hr/>

[0:Julee Rosso]
 is an American cook and food writer. In 1977 
[0:she]
 and 
[1:Sheila Lukins]
 opened and ran a gourmet food shop in New York City called The Silver Palate. In the 1980s 
[0,1:they]
 wrote, with 
[2:Michael McLaughlin]
, The Silver Palate Cookbook, The Silver Palate Good Times Cookbook, and others. A 25th Anniversary update of the Silver Palate Cookbook is forthcoming.

"She changed the way America eats." - New York Newsday
<hr/>

[0:Jules Harder]
 was the first chef of the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, California when it first opened in 1876. 
[0:he]
 had previously been chef at Delmonico's and the Union Club in New York City, and the Grand Union Hotel in Saratoga. In 1885 
[0:he]
 authored “The Physiology of Taste: Harder’s Book of Practical American Cookery,” the first (and only) of a planned six-volume book on cooking.
<hr/>

[0:Manju Malhi]
 is an Indian-born British chef and food writer, specialising in Anglo-Indian cuisine. 
[0:she]
 was raised in North West London where 
[0:she]
 grew up surrounded by Indian culture, traditions and lifestyles. However, 
[0:she]
 spent several years of 
[0:her]
 childhood in India where 
[0:she]
 explored and experienced the vast and varied cuisines of the country. 
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 has come up with 
[0:her]
 own self-styled "Brit-Indi" style of food, which mixes Indian and Western influences.

[0:Malhi]
 came to prominence in 1999 when 
[0:she]
 won a competition to find a guest chef for the BBC's Food and Drink programme and 
[0:_]
 cooked with 
[1:Antony Worrall Thompson]
 on the show, and this was followed by 
[0:her]
 award winning debut book Brit Spice, published in 2002 by Penguin Books. 
[0:she]
 has also made guest appearances on several other programmes, on ITV’s This Morning, Channel Five’s Open House and The Terry and Gaby Show, Sky One, UKTV Food’s Great Food Live and the BBC’s Saturday Kitchen.

In 2004 
[0:Malhi]
 published a second book, entitled India with Passion, which covers regional Indian home cuisine, and a third, Easy Indian Cookbook, was released in April 2008. 
[0:she]
 is also currently working on a 40-part series on British food for Indian broadcaster NDTV.

[0:Malhi]
 also writes on Indian food for newspapers and magazines, and 
[0:_]
 has provided voice overs for BBC News 24, BBC World and the BBC Asian Network. While writing and researching for 
[0:her]
 books, 
[0:she]
 does live continuity announcing for BBC Two television, and 
[0:_]
 is the voice of the BBC Food channel. 
[0:she]
 also works with the VSO charity to promote their annual Big Curry Night campaign.
<hr/>

[0:Marika Hanbury-Tenison]
 (1938-1982) was an English journalist, cookery writer, and explorer. Born in London, in 1938, 
[0:she]
 was the daughter of 
[1,2:John and Alexandra Hopkinson]
. 
[0:she]
 never had any formal domestic science training, but 
[0:_]
 was interested in food from an early age, and 
[0:_]
 learned cooking mainly by trial and error.

In 1959, at the age of twenty, 
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 married 
[3:the Cornish explorer Robin Hanbury-Tenison]
, and 
[0:_]
 lived with 
[3:him]
 in a fourteenth-century farmhouse on Bodmin Moor. 
[0,3:they]
 had 
[4,5:two children]
, 
[4:Lucy]
 (b. 1960) and 
[5:Rupert]
 (b. 1970). 
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 was often away on an expedition, and 
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 turned to writing in 
[3:his]
 absence. 
[0:she]
 began by finding a job as a £1-a-week cookery writer for a local paper, and over the next fifteen years 
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 wrote thirty cookbooks and numerous magazine articles. 
[0:she]
 was cookery editor of the Sunday Telegraph from 1968 until 
[0:her]
 death in 1982, and 
[0:_]
 also appeared frequently on Westward Television.

In 1971, while still in pain from a serious illness following the birth of her son by Caesarean section, 
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 accompanied 
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 on a three-month expedition, backed by Survival International, to visit and live among the Xingu people in Brazil, speaking with local people and studying their living conditions. After returning to England, 
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Marika name_plain_short 0.305138
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.001845
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.024955
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.5793
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.003667">[0:she]</font>
 wrote For Better, For Worse: To the Brazilian Jungles and Back Again (1972), which was published in the United States with the title Tagging Along.

In 1973, 
<font color="red" title="0,3:the Hanbury-Tenisons
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 followed up 
[0,3:their]
 journey to Brazil with a three-month visit to one to the islands of Indonesia. 
<font color="red" title="0:Marika
_ empty_no_case 0.001211
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her pronoun_accusative_him 0.002066
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000742">[0:she]</font>
 visited about a dozen tribes, taking tea with former cannibals, swimming through swollen rivers, being attacked by leeches, surviving a shipwreck, and becoming ill and exhausted. 
[0:she]
 wrote about the experience in A Slice of Spice, published in 1974.

<font color="red" title="0,3:the Hanbury-Tenisons
_ empty_no_case 0.00128
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their pronoun_genitive_his 0.001692
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 made 
[0,3:their]
 last research trip in 1979, when 
[0,3:they]
 visited Malaysia as part of a Royal Geographical Society scientific expedition. Shortly afterwards, 
[0:Marika]
 was diagnosed with cancer. 
[0:she]
 died in 1982, at the age of forty-four.
<hr/>

[0:Martin Yan]
 (Chinese: 甄文達; Pinyin: Zhēn Wéndá; Cantonese jyutping: Yan Man Tat) (born 1948) is a Chinese-born American chef and the host of the award-winning US national cooking show Yan Can Cook.
<hr/>

[0:Michael Chiarello]
 (born January 26, 1962 in Red Bluff, California, United States) is an American celebrity chef specializing in Italian-influenced California cuisine. 
[0:he]
 hosts the cooking show, Easy Entertaining with Michael Chiarello, on the Food Network and 
[0:_]
 hosts NapaStyle on the Network. 
<font color="red" title="0:Chiarello
_ empty_no_case 0.009839
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Chiarello name_plain_short 0.192052
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he pronoun_accusative_he -1
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000652
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.003079
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.754817
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000133">[0:he]</font>
 owns a winery, Chiarello Family Vineyards, and NapaStyle, a purveyor of food, cookware, and furniture.

Born to an Italian-American family, 
[0:Chiarello]
 rose to prominence at a young age. After graduating from the Culinary Institute of America in 1982, 
[0:he]
 studied hospitality management at Florida International University, receiving 
[0:his]
 bachelors degree in 1984. The next year, 
[0:he]
 opened The Grand Bay Hotel in Coconut Grove, Florida, and Toby's Bar and Grill. 
[0:he]
 was honored as 1985's Chef of the Year by Food &amp; Wine Magazine.

Later in the 1980s, 
[0:Chiarello]
 moved back to 
[0:his]
 home state of California, making 
[0:his]
 home in the Napa Valley. 
[0:he]
 opened the Tra Vigne restaurant, creating a menu influenced by the cuisine of 
[0:his]
 family's native Calabria and rife with local seasonal ingredients. 
[0:he]
 has since served as executive chef in numerous American restaurants including Caffe Museo in San Francisco, Ajax Tavern and Bump's in Aspen, Colorado, and Bistecca in Scottsdale, Arizona.

[0:his]
 first cooking show, Season by Season, debuted on PBS in 2001. 
[0:he]
 hosted two more series for PBS, Michael Chiarello's Napa and Michael Chiarello's Napa: Casual Cooking over the next two years before moving to the Food Network to host Easy Entertaining in 2003. In 2004, 
<font color="red" title="0:Chiarello's
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he pronoun_accusative_he -1
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002586">[0:his]</font>
 latest show, NapaStyle, premiered on the Food Network's sister network Fine Living Network.

[0:Chiarello]
 has been married since 2003 to 
[1:his wife]
[1:Eileen]
, with 
[1:whom]
[0:he]
 has one son, 
[2:Aidan]
, born in 2005. 
[0:he]
 has 
[3,4,5:three daughters]
, 
[3:Felicia]
, 
[4:Margoux]
 and 
[5:Giana]
 from 
[0:his]
 previous marriage.
<hr/>

[0:Patricia Wells]
 (born 5 November 1946 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is a cookbook author. 
[0:her]
 book Patricia Wells at Home in Provence (1996) won the James Beard Award for Best International Cookbook. 
<font color="red" title="0:Wells
_ empty_no_case 0.004049
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 is also the only American and the only woman to be a restaurant critic for a major French publication, L'Express. 

<font color="red" title="0:Patricia
_ empty_no_case 0.004052
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000913">[0:she]</font>
 is also good friends with 
[1:Ina Garten]
.

*The Food Lover's Guide to Paris (1984)
*Bistro Cooking (1989)
*Simply French (1991)
*Patricia Wells' Trattoria (1993)
*Patricia Wells at Home in Provence (1996)
*L'Atélier of Joel Robuchon (1998)
*The Paris Cookbook (2001)
<hr/>

[0:Philippe Rochat]
 (29 November 1953 in Le Sentier) is a Swiss chef and the owner of the Restaurant de L'Hôtel de Ville in Crissier.

The restaurant has won three Michelin Guide stars, and was voted 27th best in the world in Restaurant (magazine) Top 50 awards 2008.
<hr/>

[0:Pierre Hermé]
 (born November 20, 1961, Colmar) is a French pastry chef 
<font color="red" title="0:that
_ empty_no_case 0.002757
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000657
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that pronoun_nominative_that 0.000658
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.955783">[0:who]</font>
 Vogue called "the Picasso of Pastry".
<hr/>

[0:Prosper Montagné]
 (14 November 1865, Carcassonne, France - 22 April 1948) was a chef and author of many books and articles on food, cooking, and gastronomy, notably the Larousse Gastronomique.

Upon leaving the Lycée de Carcassonne, 
[0:he]
 wished to become an architect, but this proved impossible. 
[1:his father]
 acquired l'Hotel des Quatre-Saisons in Toulouse, with 
[0:his son]
 as a chef - the beginning of an illustrious career.

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_ father son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
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Prosper Montagné father son name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him father son pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his father son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he father son pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who father son pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 0.000323
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_ empty_no_case 0.014857
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000644">[0:Montagné]</font>
 apprenticed at the Grand Hôtel of Paris and the Hotel d'Angleterre of Cauterets, then 
<font color="red" title="0:_
_ father son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
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Prosper Montagné's father son name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
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Prosper Montagné father son name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him father son pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his father son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he father son pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who father son pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 2e-05
his son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left 8e-05
_ empty_no_case 0.326732
Montagné's name_genitive_short 0.000242
Prosper Montagné's name_genitive 0.000138
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001766
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 worked at various restaurants in Paris and San Remo, and the Hôtel de Paris of Monte Carlo. In 1900, 
[0:he]
 returned to Paris and 
[0:_]
 was chef of the Pavillon d'Armenonville, the Pavillon Ledoyen, and finally the Grand Hotel where 
[0:he]
 stayed for 10 years. Later, 
[0:he]
 had 
[0:his]
 own restaurant, the Montagné, and 
[0:_]
 was a consultant to La Reine Pédauque.

[0:he]
 wrote many books on cooking, including Le grand livre de cuisine--considered 
[0:his]
 masterpiece, La grande cuisine illustrée, and Larousse Gastronomique with Prosper Salles; Bonne chère, pas chère, La cuisine diétique, Les délices de la table, Le livres des cuisines militaires, Mon menu, and Le festin occitan. 
[0:he]
 also contributed to many newspapers and magazines, and 
[0:_]
 was editor in chief of the Revue culinaire.

The Encyclopædia Britannica writes of 
<font color="red" title="0:him
_ father son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
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Prosper Montagné father son name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him father son pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his father son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he father son pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who father son pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 0.000233
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:
"After Carême, the two men who probably had the greatest impact on French gastronomy and that of the world at large were Prosper Montagné and Georges-Auguste Escoffier. Montagné was one of the great French chefs of all time, and he achieved a secure place in gastronomic history by creating Larousse Gastronomique (1938), the basic encyclopaedia of French gastronomy. As a young man..., he came to the conclusion that all pièces montées, as well as superfluous garnitures and decorations, should be discarded."

<font color="red" title="0:he
_ father son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
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Prosper Montagné's father son name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Montagné father son name_plain_short:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Prosper Montagné father son name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him father son pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his father son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he father son pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who father son pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 3e-05
his son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left 0.000133
_ empty_no_case 0.000336
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Prosper Montagné's name_genitive 0.001227
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00149">[0:Montagné]</font>
 lends 
[0:his]
 name to the Montagné, a trade association of French food professionals.

[0:Montagné]
 was a Knight of the Légion d'Honneur.
<hr/>

[0:Robert Carrier OBE]
 (born Robert Carrier McMahon in November 10, 1923 in Tarrytown, New York – died June 27, 2006 in France) was an American chef, restaurateur and cookery writer.
<hr/>

<font color="red" title="0:Ron Siegel
_ empty_no_case 0.000355
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 is an American chef working in San Francisco. 
[0:he]
 is currently Chef of the Dining Room at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, taking over for 
<font color="red" title="0:Chef Sylvain Portay
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 in 2004. 
<font color="red" title="0:Siegel
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000695">[0:he]</font>
 is perhaps best known for 
[0:his]
 1999 appearance on Iron Chef, becoming the first ever U.S. citizen to win in Kitchen Stadium.
<hr/>

[0:Rosa Lewis, née Ovenden]
 (1867 – 1952) was a British chef and owner of the Cavendish Hotel in London, located at the intersection of Jermyn Street and Duke Street. Known as the "Queen of Cooks", 
[0:her]
 culinary skills were highly prized by 
[1:Edward VII]
, with 
<font color="red" title="0:whom
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<font color="red" title="0:she
_ empty_no_case 0.029126
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.286582">[0:who]</font>
 was rumoured to have had an affair in the 1890s. 
[0:she]
 was also called "The Duchess of Jermyn Street."
<hr/>

[0:Sara Moulton]
 (Born February 1, 1952) is the executive chef of Gourmet magazine and 
[0:_]
 was host of the Food Network show Sara's Secrets and Cooking Live.

After graduating from the University of Michigan in 1974 with no plans for a career, 
[0:Moulton]
 attended the Culinary Institute of America. 
[0:she]
 then worked in restaurants in Boston and New York City and as an apprentice in Chartres, France.

[0:she]
 worked as a sous-chef at La Tulipe in New York and 
[0:_]
 co-founded the New York Women's Culinary Alliance. In 1983 
[0:she]
 worked at the Institute of Culinary Education and in 1984 
[0:she]
 took a job in the test kitchen of Gourmet magazine, where 
[0:she]
 eventually became executive chef.

<font color="red" title="0:her
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00039">[0:Moulton's]</font>
 friendship with 
[1:Julia Child]
 also led to a position of executive chef for Good Morning America, cooking behind the scenes for guests. 
[0:she]
 became the show's Food Contributor in March 1996 and in April became the host of the Food Network's Cooking Live. After Cooking Live, 
<font color="red" title="0:Moulton
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 went on to host Sara's Secrets.

<font color="red" title="0:she
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 currently lives in New York City with 
[2:her husband]
, 
[2:Bill]
, and 
[3,4:their two children]
, 
[3:Ruth]
 and 
[4:Sam]
.

<font color="red" title="0:Sara Moulton
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 has left the Food Network. 
<font color="red" title="0:Moulton
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 is the host of a new cooking show on PBS titled "Sara's Weeknight Meals".
<hr/>

[0:Sharon K. Tyler Herbst]
 (b. circa 1942 – d. January 26 2007) was an American writer of 16 cookbooks, and culinary reference works, best known for 
[0:her]
 fourth book, the seminal culinary reference work The Food Lover's Companion. 
<font color="red" title="0:Herbst
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 refused to reveal 
[0:her]
 age, although an Intelius search in November 2007 indicates that 
[0:she]
 is 65 years old (Intelius does not distinguish between living and dead persons), making 1942 the most likely year of 
[0:her]
 birth.
<hr/>

[0:Tim Love]
 (November 11, 1971) is a well-known Texas chef, best-known for 
[0:his]
 creations of urban western cooking (see Cuisine of the Southwestern United States), and 
[0:his]
 restaurant "The Lonesome Dove Western Bistro" (named as an homage to the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by 
[1:Larry McMurtry]
, "Lonesome Dove") in the historic Fort Worth Stockyards in Texas. Donning a cowboy hat instead of the usual chef's toque, 
[0:he]
 has become popular with Fort Worth's rising culinary scene and 
[0:_]
 is a proponent of enhancing the status of Fort Worth cuisine over its neighbor to the east, Dallas.
<hr/>

[0:Vikas Khanna]
 (born November 14, 1971) is a famous Indian chef, restaurateur, food writer, and humanitarian based in New York City.
<hr/>

[0:Wilbur Mitcham]
 (10 December 1924 - 15 June 2003) was an internationally renowned southern chef from Macon, Georgia. 
<font color="red" title="0:Mitcham
_ empty_no_case 0.002155
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 briefly served in the U.S. Army as a field artilleryman during World War II but 
<font color="red" title="0:_
_ empty_no_case 0.212848
Mitcham's name_genitive_short 0.002098
Wilbur Mitcham's name_genitive 0.000553
Mitcham name_plain_short 0.207166
Wilbur Mitcham name_plain 0.04878
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001729
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.001049
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.51769
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000969">[0:he]</font>
 was medically discharged due to health reasons. Upon 
[0:his]
 discharge from the Army 
[0:he]
 went to New York City where 
[0:he]
 learned 
[0:his]
 culinary skills as an understudy to 
[1:a famous Asian Chef cook]
. 
<font color="red" title="0:Mitcham
_ empty_no_case 0.013192
Mitcham's name_genitive_short 0.000971
Wilbur Mitcham's name_genitive 0.000318
Mitcham name_plain_short 0.274299
Wilbur Mitcham name_plain 0.016502
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001418
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.016125
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.645775
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000715">[0:he]</font>
 returned to Macon and 
[0:_]
 landed a position as a short order cook with 
[2:Len Berg's]
 Restaurant in 1943. "Chef", as 
[0:he]
 was so affectionately known by 
[0:his]
 constituents and friends, served as the senior chef cook of Restaurant for over 60 years until 
[0:he]
 took ill. 
[0:he]
 cooked for the likes of such famous celebrities as 
[4:Sam Snead]
, 
[5:Joe Dimaggio]
, 
[6:Otis Redding]
, 
[7:Greg Allman]
 and the Allman Brothers Band. 
<font color="red" title="0:Mitcham
_ empty_no_case 0.022342
Mitcham's name_genitive_short 0.001629
Wilbur Mitcham's name_genitive 0.000216
Mitcham name_plain_short 0.358058
Wilbur Mitcham name_plain 0.05
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001877
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.004418
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.544861
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000909">[0:he]</font>
 is featured in several Southern culinary arts publications. 
[0:he]
 is listed in the Encyclopedia and The Inn as a regional cook of note. 
[0:he]
 was made famous throughout the state of Georgia and beyond for 
[0:his]
 "HMFPIC" (Home Made Fresh Peach Ice Cream) along with several of 
[0:his]
 other original recipes. 
<font color="red" title="0:Mitcham
_ empty_no_case 0.001918
Mitcham's name_genitive_short 0.001462
Wilbur Mitcham's name_genitive 0.000508
Mitcham name_plain_short 0.095416
Wilbur Mitcham name_plain 0.018109
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000457
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.012132
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.857072
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000507">[0:he]</font>
 was married for over 60 years to 
[3:the former Annie Mae Leonard]
. 
[0:he]
 supported 
[3:her]
 and 
[0:his]
 13 children until 
[0:his]
 untimely demise on Fathers Day in 2003.
<hr/>

[0:Adrianus Petit Coclico]
 (Flanders, 1499 - Copenhagen, after Sept. 1562) was a Netherlandish composer of the Renaissance.
<hr/>

[0:Alamanda]
 was a trobairitz 
[0:whose]
 only surviving work is a tenso with 
[1:Giraut de Bornelh]
 called S'ie.us qier conseill, bella amia Alamanda. In the past 
[0:she]
 was usually considered fictitious and the "tenso" was considered a piece of 
[1:Giraut's]
 writing. However, an Alamanda is mentioned by three other troubadours, including 
[2:the trobairitz Lombarda]
, indicating that 
[0:she]
 was probably real and quite prominent in Occitan poetic circles.

<font color="red" title="0:the trobairitz
the trobairitz common_plain 0.001858
_ empty_no_case 0.004975
Alamanda's name_genitive_short 0.002278
Alamanda name_plain_short 0.596439
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.001293
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.003142
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.261663
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000368
whose pronoun_nominative_whose 0.000186">[0:Alamanda]</font>
 is probably identical with the Alamanda de Castelnau or Castelnou who was born around 1160. 
[0:she]
 was probably poetically active only briefly while spending 
[0:her]
 youth at the court of 
[3:Raymond V of Toulouse]
. 
[0:she]
 left 
[3:his]
 court to marry 
[4:Guilhem de Castelnou]
 and 
[0:_]
 later became a canoness of Saint-Étienne at Toulouse, dying in 1223.
<hr/>

[0:Andreas Pevernage]
 (1542 or 1543 – July 30, 1591) was a Flemish composer of the late Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 was one of the minority of composers from the Low Countries who stayed in 
[0:his]
 native land throughout the turbulent period of religious conflict in the late 16th century, and 
[0:_]
 was a skilled composer of chansons, motets and madrigals.
<hr/>

[0:Antonius Divitis]
 (also Anthonius Rycke, and Anthoine Le Riche – "the rich") (c. 1470 – c. 1530) was a Flemish composer of the Renaissance, of the generation slightly younger than 
<font color="red" title="0:Josquin des Prez
_ empty_no_case 0.004423
Antonius Divitis's name_genitive 0.000654
Josquin des Prez's name_genitive 0.000654
Antonius Divitis name_plain 0.215327
Josquin des Prez name_plain 0.215327
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.013339
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.008851
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.370117
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.003283">[0:he]</font>
. 
[0:he]
 was important in the development of the parody mass.
<hr/>

[0:Benedictus Appenzeller]
 (between 1480 and 1488 - after 1558) was a Franco-Flemish singer and composer of the Renaissance, active in Bruges and Brussels. 
[0:he]
 served 
[1:Mary of Hungary]
 for much of 
[0:his]
 career, and 
<font color="red" title="0:_
_ empty_no_case 0.345913
Benedictus Appenzeller's name_genitive 0.000939
Benedictus Appenzeller name_plain 0.025393
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.00117
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.009549
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.511802
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001417">[0:he]</font>
 was a prolific composer of vocal music, both sacred and secular, throughout 
[0:his]
 long career.
<hr/>

[0:Bernart de Ventadorn]
 (1130-1140 - 1190-1200), also known as Bernard de Ventadour or Bernat del Ventadorn, was a prominent troubador of the classical age of troubadour poetry. 
[0:he]
 is remembered for 
[0:his]
 mastery as well as popularisation of the trobar leu style, and for 
[0:his]
 prolific cansos, which helped define the genre and establish the "classical" form of courtly love poetry, to be imitated and reproduced throughout the remaining century and a half of troubadour activity.

According to 
[1:the troubadour Uc de Saint Circ]
, 
[0:Bernart]
 was possibly the son of a baker at the castle of Ventadour (Ventadorn), in today's Corrèze. Yet another source, a satirical poem written by 
[2:a younger contemporary]
, 
[2:Peire d'Alvernha]
, indicates that 
[0:he]
 was the son of either a servant, a soldier, or a baker, and 
[3:his mother]
 was also either a servant or a baker. From evidence given in 
<font color="red" title="0:Bernart's
_ empty_no_case 0.002996
Bernart de Ventadorn's name_genitive 0.016358
Bernart's name_genitive_short 0.143971
Bernart de Ventadorn name_plain 0.00347
Bernart name_plain_short 0.009129
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.00839
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.701322
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.006902
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00081">[0:his]</font>
 early poem, Lo temps vai e ven e vire, 
[0:he]
 most likely learned the art of singing and writing from 
[4:his protector]
, 
[4:viscount Eble III of Ventadorn]
. 
[0:he]
 composed 
[0:his]
 first poems to 
<font color="red" title="5:his patron's wife
_ patron's wife empty_no_case:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn's patron's wife name_genitive:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart's patron's wife name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn patron's wife name_plain:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart patron's wife name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him patron's wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his patron's wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he patron's wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who patron's wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ protector wife empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn's protector wife name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart's protector wife name_genitive_short:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn protector wife name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart protector wife name_plain_short:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him protector wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his protector wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he protector wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who protector wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ wife empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 0.00976
viscount Eble III of Ventadorn's wife name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left 0.020274
viscount Eble III of Ventadorn wife name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left 0.503841
he wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000304
Marguerite de Turenne's name_genitive 0.002109
Marguerite's name_genitive_short 0.001559
Marguerite de Turenne name_plain 0.056114
Marguerite name_plain_short 0.013598
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.002063
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.001064
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.000598
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002942">[5:his wife]</font>
, 
[5:Marguerite de Turenne]
.

Forced to leave Ventadour after falling in love with 
<font color="red" title="5:Marguerite
_ patron's wife empty_no_case:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn's patron's wife name_genitive:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart's patron's wife name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn patron's wife name_plain:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart patron's wife name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him patron's wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his patron's wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he patron's wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who patron's wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_genitive_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ protector wife empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn's protector wife name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart's protector wife name_genitive_short:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart de Ventadorn protector wife name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Bernart protector wife name_plain_short:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him protector wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his protector wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
he protector wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who protector wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ wife empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 8.2e-05
viscount Eble III of Ventadorn's wife name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left 0.000477
viscount Eble III of Ventadorn wife name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him wife pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his wife pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left 0.00113
he wife pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who wife pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000254
Marguerite de Turenne's name_genitive 0.002338
Marguerite's name_genitive_short 0.001348
Marguerite de Turenne name_plain 0.698716
Marguerite name_plain_short 0.178628
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.015524
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.004138
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.000322
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002595">[5:Marguerite de Turenne]</font>
, 
[0:he]
 traveled to Montluçon and Toulouse, and 
[0:_]
 eventually followed 
[6:Eleanor of Aquitaine]
 to England and the Plantagenet court; evidence for this association and these travels comes mainly from 
[0:his]
 poems themselves. Later 
<font color="red" title="0:Bernart
_ empty_no_case 0.005199
Bernart de Ventadorn's name_genitive 0.000791
Bernart's name_genitive_short 0.006229
Bernart de Ventadorn name_plain 0.027453
Bernart name_plain_short 0.150247
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.010572
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.01073
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.765804
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000354">[0:he]</font>
 returned to Toulouse, where 
[0:he]
 was employed by 
[7:Raimon V, Count of Toulouse]
; later still 
[0:he]
 went to Dordogne, where 
[0:he]
 entered a monastery. Most likely 
[0:he]
 died there.

[0:Bernart]
 is unique among secular composers of the twelfth century in the amount of music which has survived: of 
[0:his]
 forty-five poems, eighteen have music intact, an unusual circumstance for a troubador composer (music of the trouvères has a higher survival rate, usually attributed to them surviving the Albigensian Crusade, which scattered the troubadours and destroyed many sources). 
[0:his]
 work probably dates between 1147 and 1180. 
<font color="red" title="0:Bernart
_ empty_no_case 0.007693
Bernart de Ventadorn's name_genitive 0.000544
Bernart's name_genitive_short 0.004213
Bernart de Ventadorn name_plain 0.036941
Bernart name_plain_short 0.149212
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001697
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.018406
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.766923
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001149">[0:he]</font>
 is often credited with being the most important influence on the development of the trouvère tradition in northern France, since 
[0:he]
 was well known there, 
[0:his]
 melodies were widely circulated, and the early composers of trouvère music seem to have imitated 
[0:him]
. 
<font color="red" title="0:Bernart's
_ empty_no_case 8.6e-05
Bernart de Ventadorn's name_genitive 0.015185
Bernart's name_genitive_short 0.061946
Bernart de Ventadorn name_plain 0.005583
Bernart name_plain_short 0.032668
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.019342
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.811969
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.012819
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001448">[0:his]</font>
 influence also extended to Latin literature. In 1215 
[8:the Bolognese professor Boncompagno]
 wrote in 
[8:his]
 Antiqua rhetorica that "How much fame attaches to the name of Bernard de Ventadorn, and how gloriously he made cansos and sweetly invented melodies, the world of Provence very much recognises."

On screen, 
[0:Bernart]
 was portrayed by 
[9:actor Paul Blake]
 in the BBC TV drama series The Devil's Crown (1978).
<hr/>

[0:Daniel Bacheler]
 (baptized 16 March 1572, died 1619) was an English lutenist and composer.

At the royal court 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.006355
Bacheler's name_genitive_short 0.00367
Daniel Bacheler's name_genitive 0.000735
Bacheler name_plain_short 0.442338
Daniel Bacheler name_plain 0.223606
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000621
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.000823
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.305186
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00506">[0:Bacheler]</font>
 composed some fifty lute pieces. These included a number of pavans, galliards, almaines and fantasies, including a piece titled "Monsieurs Almaine". 
[1:Elizabeth Roche]
, reviewing a CD of 
[0:his]
 work for the Daily Telegraph commented on the current neglect of 
<font color="red" title="0:Bacheler's
_ empty_no_case 0.000488
Bacheler's name_genitive_short 0.086225
Daniel Bacheler's name_genitive 0.005765
Bacheler name_plain_short 0.002403
Daniel Bacheler name_plain 0.000349
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000243
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.818231
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.001193
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000263">[0:his]</font>
 music, suggesting that one reason is the "difficulty of his ornamental style, including arpeggios, trills, and even the dazzling tremolos that conclude his variations on Mounsieurs Almaine".

The Heralds Visitation records show that 
[0:Bacheler]
 received a grant of arms in 1606.

<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.006871
Bacheler's name_genitive_short 0.003173
Daniel Bacheler's name_genitive 0.001417
Bacheler name_plain_short 0.45095
Daniel Bacheler name_plain 0.174656
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000598
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.00029
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.35159
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000826">[0:Bacheler]</font>
 was buried on 29 January 1618/1619 in St Margaret's churchyard, Lee, Kent.
<hr/>

[0:Durante degli Alighieri]
, (May/June c.1265 - September 14, 1321), commonly known as Dante Alighieri, was a Florentine poet of the Middle Ages. 
[0:his]
 central work, the Divina Commedia (originally called "Commedia" and later called "Divina" (divine) by 
<font color="red" title="1:Boccaccio
_ empty_no_case 9.1e-05
Boccaccio's name_genitive_short 0.01233
Giovanni Boccaccio's name_genitive 0.008159
Boccaccio name_plain_short 0.154417
Giovanni Boccaccio name_plain 0.749611
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001001
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.001171
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.000337
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000573">[1:Giovanni Boccaccio]</font>
 hence "Divina Commedia"), is often considered the greatest literary work composed in the Italian language and a masterpiece of world literature.

In Italian 
[0:he]
 is known as "the Supreme Poet" (il Sommo Poeta).

[0:Dante]
, 
[2:Petrarch]
 and 
[1:Boccaccio]
 are also known as "the three fountains" or "the three crowns". 
[0:Dante]
 is also called the "Father of the Italian language". The first biography written on 
<font color="red" title="0:him
_ empty_no_case 0.001139
Dante's name_genitive_short 0.008228
Durante degli Alighieri's name_genitive 0.007552
Dante name_plain_short 0.502367
Durante degli Alighieri name_plain 0.144756
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.140733
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.010976
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.067396
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.014531">[0:Dante]</font>
 was by 
<font color="red" title="1:Giovanni Boccaccio
_ empty_no_case 0.000743
Boccaccio's name_genitive_short 0.002806
Giovanni Boccaccio's name_genitive 0.00057
Boccaccio name_plain_short 0.608761
Giovanni Boccaccio name_plain 0.24857
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.0264
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.00276
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.001229
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000436">[1:Boccaccio]</font>
 (1313-1375), 
[1:who]
 wrote the Trattatello in laude di Dante.
<hr/>

[0:Egardus]
 (or Engardus or Johannes Echgaerd) was a European composer of music in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries.
<hr/>

[0:Eloy d'Amerval]
 (fl. 1455 – 1508) was a French composer, singer, choirmaster, and poet of the Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 spent most of 
[0:his]
 life in the Loire Valley of France. From 
[0:his]
 poetic works, especially 
[0:his]
 enormous 1508 poem Le livre de la deablerie, it can be inferred that 
[0:he]
 knew most of the famous composers of the time, even though 
[0:his]
 own musical works never approached theirs in renown.
<hr/>

[0:Felice Anerio]
 (1560 – September 26 or 27, 1614) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, and a member of the Roman School of composers. 
[0:he]
 was the older brother of 
<font color="red" title="1:another important, and somewhat more progressive composer of the same period
another important, and somewhat more progressive composer of the same period common_plain 0.321742
_ empty_no_case 4.3e-05
Giovanni Francesco Anerio's name_genitive 0.002968
Giovanni Francesco Anerio name_plain 0.551118
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000274
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.00035
he pronoun_nominative_he 8.5e-05
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000642">[1:Giovanni Francesco Anerio]</font>
, 
[1:Giovanni Francesco Anerio]
.
<hr/>

[0:Francesco Canova da Milano]
 (18 August 1497 – 2 January 1543) was a virtuoso Italian lutenist and composer of the Renaissance. Born in Monza, near Milan (hence the "da Milano"), 
[0:he]
 was heralded throughout Italy and Europe and 
[0:_]
 was the foremost lute composer of 
[0:his]
 time. 
[0:he]
 left several books of music for the lute. It has been noted that: "The basic facility with which he articulated the High Renaissance style for a single instrument continues to make his music uniquely valuable."
<hr/>

[0:Giammatteo Asola]
 (also spelled Gian Matteo, Giovanni Matteo; Asula, Asulae) (1532 or earlier – October 1, 1609) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 was a prolific composer of sacred music, mostly in a conservative style, although 
[0:he]
 may have been one of the first composers to write a part for basso continuo.
<hr/>

[0:Giles Farnaby]
 (c. 1563 – November 1640) was an English composer and virginalist of the Renaissance period.
<hr/>

[0:Giovanni da Cascia]
, also Jovannes de Cascia, Johannes de Florentia, Maestro Giovanni da Firenze, was an Italian composer of the medieval era, active in the middle of the fourteenth century.

Virtually nothing is known about 
<font color="red" title="0:Giovanni's
_ empty_no_case 3.5e-05
Giovanni da Cascia's name_genitive 0.008101
Giovanni's name_genitive_short 0.319116
Giovanni da Cascia name_plain 0.026127
Giovanni name_plain_short 0.00623
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001471
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.576135
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.002025
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.005147">[0:his]</font>
 life. From 
[0:his]
 surname it is presumed that 
[0:he]
 was born in the village of Cascia, near Florence. It was once thought that 
[0:he]
 held a post at Florence Cathedral, but this is no longer accepted. A Florentine chronicle states that 
[0:Giovanni]
 and 
[1:Jacopo da Bologna]
 competed at 
[2:Mastino II of Scala's]
 court; 
[2:Mastino]
 died in 1351. The metaphors used in 
[0:his]
 works are consistent with prevailing idioms of the mid-14th century. 
[0:his]
 portrait in the Squarcialupi Codex shows 
[0:him]
 without priestly garments.

Nineteen of 
<font color="red" title="0:Giovanni's
_ empty_no_case 0.000494
Giovanni da Cascia's name_genitive 0.026684
Giovanni's name_genitive_short 0.120427
Giovanni da Cascia name_plain 0.057827
Giovanni name_plain_short 0.079623
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.046212
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.493835
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.006412
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001014">[0:his]</font>
 compositions survive, scattered in nine manuscripts. Sixteen of these are madrigals, and three of them are cacce. 
[0:he]
 is thought to have written some of 
[0:his]
 own texts. Musically, 
<font color="red" title="0:Giovanni's
_ empty_no_case 0.000144
Giovanni da Cascia's name_genitive 0.008392
Giovanni's name_genitive_short 0.031816
Giovanni da Cascia name_plain 0.001477
Giovanni name_plain_short 0.004006
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000724
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.886877
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.003326
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000381">[0:his]</font>
 madrigals are of importance in the development of the style of the 14th-century madrigal. 
[0:he]
 tends to use extended melismas on the first and penultimate syllables of a poetic line, and 
[0:_]
 sometimes introduces hockets at these points. The middles of the lines are generally syllabic. Many of 
[0:his]
 works are very similar in style to the anonymous works preserved in the Rossi Codex.

Several of 
[0:his]
 works survive in quite different versions; this is evidence that improvisation was still an important aspect of musical performance up to this time. 
<font color="red" title="0:Giovanni's
_ empty_no_case 7.7e-05
Giovanni da Cascia's name_genitive 0.026936
Giovanni's name_genitive_short 0.199425
Giovanni da Cascia name_plain 0.008029
Giovanni name_plain_short 0.009727
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000743
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.713028
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.004184
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000765">[0:his]</font>
 works tend not to be tonally unified; they begin and end on different notes, and in some cases, such as Nascoso el viso, each poetic line begins and ends on different notes. Occasional imitation is found in 
[0:his]
 work.

Editions of all of 
<font color="red" title="0:Giovanni's
_ empty_no_case 6.1e-05
Giovanni da Cascia's name_genitive 0.022056
Giovanni's name_genitive_short 0.129631
Giovanni da Cascia name_plain 0.004342
Giovanni name_plain_short 0.010745
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001504
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.771449
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.000846
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000394">[0:his]</font>
 works have been completed by 
[3:W. Thomas Marrocco]
 and 
[4:Nino Pirrotta]
 in the twentieth century.
<hr/>

[0:Guillaume de Machaut]
, sometimes spelled Machault, (c. 1300 – April 1377), was an important Medieval French poet and composer. 
[0:he]
 is one of the earliest composers for whom significant biographical information is available.

<font color="red" title="0:Guillaume de Machaut
_ empty_no_case 0.003438
Guillaume de Machaut's name_genitive 0.000814
Machaut's name_genitive_short 0.003171
Guillaume de Machaut name_plain 0.063871
Machaut name_plain_short 0.683345
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.00048
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.000337
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.238241
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000944">[0:Machaut]</font>
 was "the last great poet who was also a composer," in the words of 
[1:the scholar Daniel Leech-Wilkinson]
. Well into the 15th century, 
[0:Machaut's]
 poetry was greatly admired and imitated by other poets including the likes of 
[2:Geoffrey Chaucer]
.

[0:Machaut]
 was and is the most celebrated composer of the 14th century (see Medieval music). 
[0:he]
 composed in a wide range of styles and forms and 
[0:his]
 output was enormous. 
[0:he]
 was also the most famous and historically significant representative of the musical movement known as the ars nova.

[0:Machaut]
 was especially influential in the development of the motet and the secular song (particularly the lai, and the formes fixes: rondeau, virelai and ballade). 
<font color="red" title="0:Machaut
_ empty_no_case 0.001331
Guillaume de Machaut's name_genitive 2.5e-05
Machaut's name_genitive_short 3.2e-05
Guillaume de Machaut name_plain 0.006608
Machaut name_plain_short 0.043972
him pronoun_accusative_him 7.3e-05
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.000589
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.943764
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000147">[0:he]</font>
 wrote the Messe de Nostre Dame, the earliest known complete setting of the Ordinary of the Mass attributable to a single composer, and 
[0:_]
 influenced composers for centuries to follow.
<hr/>

[0:Dom Heliodoro de Paiva]
 (fl. Coimbra, 1552) was a Portuguese composer, philosopher, and theologian.
<hr/>

[0:Henry VIII]
 (28 June 1491 - 28 January 1547) was King of England and Lord of Ireland, later King of Ireland and claimant to the Kingdom of France, from 21 April 1509 until 
[0:his]
 death. 
<font color="red" title="0:Henry
_ empty_no_case 0.001571
Henry VIII's name_genitive 0.000371
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Henry VIII name_plain 0.042566
Henry name_plain_short 0.128039
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000564
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.000294
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.003834
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.813138
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000931">[0:he]</font>
 was the second monarch of the House of Tudor, succeeding 
[1:his father]
, 
[1:Henry VII]
.

<font color="red" title="0:Henry VIII
_ empty_no_case 0.003137
Henry VIII's name_genitive 0.000775
Henry's name_genitive_short 0.005134
Henry VIII name_plain 0.076879
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.003282
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.000191
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.002333
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.111705
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001053">[0:Henry]</font>
 was a significant figure in the history of the English monarchy. Although in the first 40 years of 
[0:his]
 reign 
[0:he]
 energetically suppressed the Protestant reformation of the church, a movement having roots with 
[2:the martyr John Wycliffe of the 14th century]
, 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.121007
Henry VIII's name_genitive 0.00013
Henry's name_genitive_short 0.000916
Henry VIII name_plain 0.02998
Henry name_plain_short 0.424804
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001235
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.000428
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.002085
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.403733
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001802">[0:Henry]</font>
 is more popularly known for 
[0:his]
 political struggles with Rome. These struggles ultimately led to 
<font color="red" title="0:him
_ empty_no_case 0.003037
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.273054
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.005862">[0:his]</font>
 separating the Anglican church from the Roman hierarchy, the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and establishing 
<font color="red" title="0:himself
_ empty_no_case 0.041581
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Henry VIII name_plain 0.017584
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.247954
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.228735
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.132146
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.079382
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.009057">[0:him]</font>
 as the Supreme Head of the Church of England. Although some claim 
[0:he]
 became a Protestant on 
[0:his]
 death-bed, 
[0:he]
 advocated catholic ceremony and doctrine throughout 
[0:his]
 life. Royal backing of the English Reformation was left to 
[3,4:his heirs]
, 
[3:the devout Edward VI]
 and 
[4:the renowned Elizabeth I]
, whilst 
[5:daughter Mary I]
 temporarily reinstated papal authority over England. 
<font color="red" title="0:Henry
_ empty_no_case 0.008059
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.006491
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.00078
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.019005
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.516489
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001317">[0:he]</font>
 also oversaw the legal union of England and Wales (see Laws in Wales Acts 1535–1542). 
[0:he]
 is noted for being married six times.
<hr/>

[0:Henry Youll]
 (also Youell) was an English Madrigalist and Composer from Suffolk.

[0:his]
 work "Canzonets to Three Voyces" (London: Printed by 
[1:Thomas Este]
 [etc.], 1608).
In recent times the work has been published by Stainer and Bell (London, 1923) and various recitals and recordings of the music have been made by Madrigal groups worldwide.

[0:Youll]
 was a tutor to 
<font color="red" title="3,4,5:the sons of Edward Bacon
all of the brothers common_plain 0.072114
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.010998
the sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.010998
the three sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000869
them pronoun_accusative_him 0.011507
their pronoun_genitive_his 0.004957
they pronoun_nominative_he 0.004264
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.005991">[3,4,5:all of the brothers]</font>
; apparently 
<font color="red" title="3,4,5:all of the brothers
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.009485
the sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.009485
the three sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.008467
them pronoun_accusative_him 0.01161
their pronoun_genitive_his 0.007074
they pronoun_nominative_he 0.36907
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.055369">[3,4,5:they]</font>
 were at Cambridge together, and 
<font color="red" title="0:Youll
_ empty_no_case 0.641775
Henry Youll's name_genitive 0.000693
Youll's name_genitive_short 0.001637
Henry Youll name_plain 0.023455
Youll name_plain_short 0.180529
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.003072
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.001077
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.11662
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002243">[0:_]</font>
 recalls "what a solace their company was once to you when I nursed them amongst you." "Canzonets to Three Voyces" is dedicated to 
<font color="red" title="3,4,5:the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.006158
the sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of Nicholas Bacon name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon, third son of who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of Edward Bacon name_plain:common_plain_nesting_right 0.006158
the three sons of him pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of his pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of he pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of who pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_right -1
the three sons of _ empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000988
them pronoun_accusative_him 0.443122
their pronoun_genitive_his 0.003203
they pronoun_nominative_he 0.029293
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.011358">[3,4,5:them]</font>
.

[0:his]
 Canzonets have charm and individuality, while 
[0:his]
 choice of words--from 
[7:Sidney]
, 
[8:Ben Jonson]
, 
[9:Sir John Davies]
; indicated a man of taste.
<hr/>

[0:Marko Ivan Lukačić]
 (Lucacich or Lucacih, Fr. Joannes de Sibinico) (*Šibenik, 1575 ? - † Split, September 20 1648), Croatian renaissance composer.

Exact date of birth is unknown. In 1587 
[0:he]
 was baptised in Šibenik, and ten years later 
[0:he]
 entered the Franciscan order when 
[0:he]
 accepted 
[0:his]
 monastic name Ivan. In 1600 
[0:he]
 was sent to Italy where 
[0:he]
 studied theology and music. In 1612 
[0:he]
 signed 
[0:himself]
 as baccalaureus, while on March 23 1615 
[0:he]
 was awarded in Rome the degree of Magister Musices. In 1614 
[0:he]
 participated as maestro di cappella during the feast of St Jerome in the Croatian church in Rome. 
[0:he]
 returned to Šibenik in 1618 and two years later 
[0:he]
 moved to Split, where 
[0:he]
 became prior of the Franciscan monastery and director of music in the cathedral. These duties 
[0:he]
 accomplished for the rest of 
[0:his]
 life. While 
<font color="red" title="0:Lukačić's
_ empty_no_case 0.000127
Lukačić's name_genitive_short 0.257124
Marko Ivan Lukačić's name_genitive 0.011417
Lukačić name_plain_short 0.008359
Marko Ivan Lukačić name_plain 0.00135
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001596
himself pronoun_accusative_self 0.001213
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.677243
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.004306
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000453">[0:his]</font>
 sojourn in Italy is insufficiently documented, 
[0:his]
 engagement in Split, both as a prior and musician, left quite a few records of first-class importance for the music life of that time in Dalmatia.
<hr/>

[0:Jacobus Gallus Carniolus]
 (Jacob Handl or Jacob Handl-Gallus) (July 3, 1550 - July 18, 1591) was a late Renaissance composer of Slovene origin. Born in what is today Carniola, part of Slovenia, then part of the Habsburg Holy Roman Empire, 
[0:he]
 lived and worked in Moravia and Bohemia during the last decade of 
[0:his]
 life.
<hr/>

[0:Johannes Ghiselin]
 (Verbonnet) (fl. 1491 – 1507) was a Flemish composer of the Renaissance, active in France, Italy and in the Low Countries. 
[0:he]
 was a contemporary of 
[1:Josquin des Prez]
, and a significant composer of masses, motets, and secular music. 
[0:his]
 reputation was considerable, as shown by 
[2:music printer Ottaviano Petrucci's]
 decision to print a complete book of 
[0:his]
 masses immediately after 
[2:his]
 similar publication of masses by 
[1:Josquin]
 – only the second such publication in music history.
<hr/>

[0:Loyset Compère]
 (c. 1445 - August 16, 1518) was a French composer of the Renaissance. Of the same generation as 
[1:Josquin des Prez]
, 
[0:he]
 was one of the most significant composers of motets and chansons of that era, and one of the first musicians to bring the light Italianate Renaissance style to France.
<hr/>

[0:Luca Marenzio]
 (also Marentio) (October 18? 1553? - August 22, 1599) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 was one of the most renowned composers of madrigals, and 
[0:_]
 wrote perhaps the finest examples of the form in its late stage of development, prior to its early Baroque transformation by 
[1:Monteverdi]
.
<hr/>

[0:Ludwig Senfl]
 (born around 1486, died between December 2, 1542 and August 10, 1543) was a Swiss composer of the Renaissance, active in Germany. 
[0:he]
 was the most famous pupil of 
[1:Heinrich Isaac]
, 
<font color="red" title="0:_
_ empty_no_case 0.12972
Ludwig Senfl's name_genitive 0.000121
Senfl's name_genitive_short 0.000104
Ludwig Senfl name_plain 0.012534
Senfl name_plain_short 0.067994
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000192
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.002415
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.777144
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001751">[0:he]</font>
 was music director to the court of 
[2:Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor]
, and 
[0:_]
 was an influential figure in the development of the Franco-Flemish polyphonic style in Germany.

[0:Senfl]
 was probably born in Basle around 1486, and 
[0:_]
 lived in Zürich from 1488 until 1496, when 
[0:he]
 joined the choir of the Hofkapelle of 
<font color="red" title="2:Emperor Maximilian I
the emperor's common_genitive 0.003856
the Emperor common_plain 0.056968
_ empty_no_case 7.3e-05
Emperor Maximilian I's name_genitive 0.002232
Maximilian's name_genitive_short 0.017345
Emperor Maximilian I name_plain 0.173029
Maximilian name_plain_short 0.631517
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.02428
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.021193
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.001706
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002613">[2:Maximilian]</font>
 in Augsburg. Apart from one brief visit in 1504 
[0:he]
 appears never again to have lived in Switzerland.

In 1497 
[0:he]
 followed the Hofkapelle to Vienna, and between 1500 and 1504 
[0:he]
 probably studied in Vienna for three years, the standard practice for choirboys whose voices had broken, as part of the normal training for the priesthood. During this period 
[0:he]
 studied with 
<font color="red" title="1:Heinrich Isaac
the older composer's common_genitive 0.001046
_ empty_no_case 0.000113
Heinrich Isaac's name_genitive 0.000863
Isaac's name_genitive_short 0.00533
Heinrich Isaac name_plain 0.174497
Isaac name_plain_short 0.702885
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.0088
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.002589
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.000625
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00196">[1:Isaac]</font>
, serving as 
[1:his]
 copyist by 1509; 
[0:he]
 is known to have copied much of 
<font color="red" title="1:the older composer's
the older composer's common_genitive 0.006001
_ empty_no_case 0.008605
Heinrich Isaac's name_genitive 0.028424
Isaac's name_genitive_short 0.31605
Heinrich Isaac name_plain 0.003527
Isaac name_plain_short 0.024825
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.004668
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.557667
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.004739
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00167">[1:his]</font>
 Choralis Constantinus, an enormous work which 
[0:he]
 was later to complete after 
[1:Isaac's]
 death.

After a trip to Italy sometime between 1508 and 1510, 
[0:Senfl]
 returned to the Hofkapelle; 
<font color="red" title="2:the Emperor
the emperor's common_genitive 0.001019
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_ empty_no_case 0.001569
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 appointed 
[0:him]
 to fill 
[1:Isaac's]
 position as court composer when 
<font color="red" title="1:Isaac
the older composer's common_genitive 0.0049
_ empty_no_case 0.016295
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.019992
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001773">[1:he]</font>
 died in 1517. In 1518 
[0:Senfl]
 lost a toe in a hunting accident; evidently the injury disabled 
[0:him]
 for up to a year. When 
<font color="red" title="2:the Emperor
the emperor's common_genitive 0.000329
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_ empty_no_case 0.010987
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.00202
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001192">[2:he]</font>
 died in 1519, 
[0:Senfl]
 was out of a job, and 
[0:his]
 circumstances altered for the worse: 
[3:Charles V]
 dismissed most of 
<font color="red" title="2:Maximilian's
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 musicians, and 
[3:_]
 even refused to pay 
[0:Senfl]
 the annual stipend which had been promised to 
[0:him]
 in the event of 
<font color="red" title="2:the emperor's
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 death. During the next few years 
[0:he]
 traveled widely, mainly job-seeking, but 
[0:he]
 was also active as a composer. 
[0:he]
 is known to have attended the Diet of Worms in 1521, and, while 
[0:he]
 never officially became a Protestant, 
[0:his]
 sympathies evidently were with 
[4:Luther]
, and 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.641215
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 was later examined by the Inquisition and voluntarily gave up 
[0:his]
 priesthood. 
<font color="red" title="0:Senfl
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 carried on an extensive correspondence both with 
[5:Lutheran Duke Albrecht of Prussia]
 and with 
<font color="red" title="6:Martin Luther himself
_ empty_no_case 3.9e-05
Martin Luther himself's name_genitive_self -1
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, beginning in 1530.

Eventually 
<font color="red" title="0:Senfl
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 acquired a post in Munich, a place which had high musical standards, a strong need for new music, and which was relatively tolerant of those with Protestant sympathies; 
[0:he]
 was to remain there for the rest of 
[0:his]
 life. By 1540 
[0:he]
 was ill, judging from 
[0:his]
 correspondence with 
[5:Duke Albrecht]
, and 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.336716
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 probably died in early 1543.
<hr/>

[0:Orazio Vecchi]
 (December 6, 1550 (baptized) - February 19, 1605) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 is most famous for 
[0:his]
 madrigal comedies, particularly L'Amfiparnaso.
<hr/>

[0:Paolo da Firenze]
 (Paolo Tenorista, "Magister Dominus Paulas Abbas de Florentia") (c. 1355 - after September 20, 1436) was an Italian composer and music theorist of the late 14th and early 15th centuries, the transition from the musical Medieval era to the Renaissance. More surviving music of the Italian ars nova is attributable to 
<font color="red" title="0:Paolo
_ empty_no_case 0.001502
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.008907
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.05657
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.029821">[0:him]</font>
 than to any other composer except for 
[1:Francesco Landini]
.
<hr/>

[0:Pedro de Cristo]
 (Coimbra, 1545/1550 - Coimbra, December 12 1618) was a Portuguese composer of the Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 is one of the most important Portuguese polyphonists of the 16th and 17th centuries.
<hr/>

[0:Pierre Certon]
 (c1510-1520 - February 23, 1572) was a French composer of the Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 was a representative of the generation after 
[1:Josquin]
 and 
[2:Mouton]
, and 
[0:_]
 was influential in the late development of the French chanson.
<hr/>

[0:Pierre Clereau]
 (died before 11 January 1570) was a French composer, choirmaster, and possibly organist of the Renaissance, active in several towns in Lorraine, including Toul and Nancy. 
[0:he]
 wrote both sacred and secular vocal music, in Latin, French, and Italian. Among 
[0:his]
 many compositions is a Requiem mass, as well as some sacred songs influenced by the Huguenot psalm style; 
[0:he]
 is not known, however, to have converted to Protestantism.
<hr/>

[0:Pierre Passereau]
 (fl. 1509 - 1547) was a French composer of the Renaissance. Along with 
[1:Clément Janequin]
, 
[0:he]
 was one of the most popular composers of "Parisian" chansons in France in the 1530s. 
[0:his]
 output consisted almost exclusively of chansons; most of them were published by 
[2:printer Pierre Attaingnant]
. Most of them were "rustic" in character, similar to patter songs, using onomatopoeia, double entendres, and frequent obscenity, a common feature of popular music in France and the Low Countries in the 1530s.
<hr/>

[0:Richard George Carleton]
 (11 July 1943 - 7 May 2006) was an Australian television journalist.
<hr/>

[0:Robert Johnson II]
 (c. 1580 - c. 1634) was an English composer and lutenist of the late Tudor and early Jacobean eras.
<hr/>

[0:Wacław z Szamotuł]
 (b. c. 1520 in Szamotuły near Poznań - c. 1560 in Pińczów), also called Wacław Szamotulski or Venceslaus Samotulinus, was a Polish composer.

<font color="red" title="0:Szamotulski
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000346
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00177">[0:he]</font>
 was a true Renaissance man, educated in such diverse areas as law, mathematics, and philosophy, which 
[0:he]
 studied at the University of Cracow. Aside from music, 
[0:he]
 also wrote poetry, both in Polish and Latin. In 1547 or 1548 
[0:he]
 was appointed to the court of 
[1:Sigismund II Augustus]
 as a composer. However, 
<font color="red" title="0:he
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000849">[0:Szamotulski]</font>
 did not have to teach youngs singers, probably for 
[0:his]
 problems with voice.

Unfortunately, 
<font color="red" title="0:he
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.193085
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000558">[0:Wacław]</font>
 died early, and only a few of 
[0:his]
 works survived. In 
[2:Szymon Starowolski's]
 words, 
[2:who]
 wrote the first concise biography of 
<font color="red" title="0:Wacław
_ empty_no_case 0.001763
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.012009
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001804">[0:Szamotulski]</font>
, If the Gods had let 
[0:him]
 live longer, the Poles would have no need to envy the Italians 
[3,4,5:their Palestrina, Lappi, and Vedana]
.

<font color="red" title="0:his
_ empty_no_case 0.002871
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 motets In te Domine speravi and Ego sum pastor bonus were the first Polish musical compositions to be published abroad.
<hr/>

[0:William Byrd]
 (c. 1540 - 4 July 1623) was an English composer of the Renaissance. 
[0:he]
 cultivated many of the forms current in England at the time, including various types of sacred and secular polyphony, keyboard and consort music.
<hr/>

[0:Boris Borisovich Galitzine]
 (b. St. Petersburg, February 18 (O.S.) or March 2 (N.S.), 1862; d. near Petrograd, May 4 (O.S.) or May 17 (N.S.), 1916) was a prominent Russian physicist 
[0:who]
 invented the first electromagnetic seismograph in 1906. 
[0:he]
 was one of the founders of modern Seismology. In 1911 
[0:he]
 was chosen to be the president of the International Seismology Association. 
[0:he]
 belonged to the Galitzine family, one of the leading noble houses of Imperial Russia. 
According to 
<font color="red" title="2:my sister
_ sister empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 0.020204
my sister pronoun_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000347">[2:_ sister]</font>
, 
[0:Galatzine]
 currently has a town named after 
[0:him]
 in central Pennsylvania October 14.
<hr/>

[0:Chester Floyd Carlson]
 (February 8, 1906 – September 19, 1968) was an American physicist, inventor, and patent attorney born in Seattle, Washington. 
[0:he]
 invented the process of electrophotography, which produced a dry copy rather than a wet copy, as was produced by the mimeograph process. 
[0:his]
 process was subsequently renamed to xerography, a term that literally means "dry copy". The road to 
<font color="red" title="0:his
_ empty_no_case 0.000144
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.007315
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.302295
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001052">[0:Carlson's]</font>
 success -- or that for xerography's success -- had been long and filled with failure. 
[0:his]
 next-to-last attempt to garner the interest -- and funds -- 
[0:he]
 needed to commercialize the physics was a meeting with the Department of the Navy. The Navy had a specific interest in the production of dry copies but they did not "see" what 
<font color="red" title="0:Carlson
_ empty_no_case 0.004145
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.869405
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00023">[0:he]</font>
 saw. As what may have become a last-ditch effort, 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.006389
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000607">[0:Carlson]</font>
 took 
[0:his]
 idea to Batelle Development Corporation in Columbus, Ohio, in 1942. 
<font color="red" title="0:Carlson
_ empty_no_case 0.004827
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.737506
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000421">[0:he]</font>
 met with 
<font color="red" title="2:Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right -1
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Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Williams's name_genitive_short:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right 0.006753
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Williams name_plain_short:name_plain_nesting_right 0.001321
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000151
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. By using a glass rod, an animal pelt and carbon powder, 
[0:Carlson]
 demonstrated how the electric charge that developed on the glass rod (now named triboelectric charge, though generalized as a static charge) could be used to attract the carbon particles to it. 
<font color="red" title="0:Carlson
_ empty_no_case 0.005662
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 convinced 
[2:Crout]
, 
<font color="red" title="2:Crout
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Williams's name_genitive_short:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right 0.000167
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Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.018155
Crout's name_genitive_short 0.001546
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.030137">[2:he]</font>
 persuaded 
[1:Williams]
 and other Batelle directors to make a "substantial investment in development of the process". Between 1946 and 1953 
<font color="red" title="2:Crout
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to _ empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams's name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Williams's name_genitive_short:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Director Clyde E. Williams name_plain:name_plain_nesting_right 7.7e-05
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to Williams name_plain_short:name_plain_nesting_right 0.000116
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to him pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to his pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to he pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_right -1
Batelle's John S. Crout, General Manager and assistant to who pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_right -1
_ empty_no_case 0.029634
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 "negotiated the series of licensing contracts with the Haloid Company (which later changed its name to Xerox Corporation. To summarize, 
<font color="red" title="0:Carlson's
_ empty_no_case 0.006038
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.007122
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.545075
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002461">[0:his]</font>
 idea was proved feasible by Batelle between 1942 and 1946, then the company that would become Xerox Corp. (Haloid) made it commercial between 1946 and 1953. It took almost another 20 years before Xerography put the last mimeograph machine in the storage closet. 
<font color="red" title="0:Carlson
_ empty_no_case 0.004314
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 was persistent and 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.90982
Carlson's name_genitive_short 3.9e-05
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Carlson name_plain_short 0.002941
Chester Floyd Carlson name_plain 0.001271
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000242
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.082125
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000622">[0:_]</font>
 was a hard worker. The process 
[0:he]
 conceived made 
[0:him]
 wealthy and it made Batelle wealthy. But it also transformed copyright law (reference?) and the way people work. The physics behind xerography continue to yield new technology such as the laser printer.
<hr/>

[0:Donát Bánki]
 (June 6, 1859 - August 1, 1922) was a Hungarian mechanical engineer, inventor of (among many other things) the carburetor, together with 
[2:János Csonka]
, in 1893, as the Bánki-Csonka engine. The invention is often, incorrectly credited to 
[1:the German Wilhelm Maybach]
, 
[1:who]
 submitted 
[1:his]
 patent half a year after 
<font color="red" title="0:Bánki
_ empty_no_case 0.008632
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.07575
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.144543
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.31914
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.013968">[0:he]</font>
 and 
[2:Csonka]
.

In 1898, 
<font color="red" title="0:Donát Bánki
_ empty_no_case 0.00138
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Donát Bánki's name_genitive 0.005691
Bánki name_plain_short 0.791752
Donát Bánki name_plain 0.118833
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.012406
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.006156
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.014662
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000578">[0:Bánki]</font>
 invented the high-compression engine with a dual carburetor, an evaporation method used ever since.

The invention of the carburetor helped the development of automobiles, as previously no method was known to correctly mix the fuel and air for engines.

Some sources say that the idea of the carburetor came from 
[3:a flower-girl]
. One evening, 
[0:Bánki]
 saw 
<font color="red" title="3:her
a flower-girl common_plain 0.089354
_ empty_no_case 8.3e-05
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.078197
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.059459
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.003168">[3:a flower-girl]</font>
 while walking home from the Budapest Technical University. 
[3:she]
 was sprinkling water onto 
[3:her]
 flowers by blowing spray from 
[3:her]
 mouth.

[0:Bánki]
 is also given partial credit for the invention of the Crossflow turbine.
<hr/>

[0:Elisha Graves Otis]
 (August 3 1811 -- April 8 1861), son of 
[1:Stephen Otis Jr.]
 and 
<font color="red" title="2:_ wife Pheobe Glynn
_ empty_no_case 0.003063
_ wife Pheobe Glynn's empty_no_case:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
Stephen Otis Jr.'s wife Pheobe Glynn's name_genitive:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
Stephen Otis Jr. wife Pheobe Glynn's name_plain:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
him wife Pheobe Glynn's pronoun_accusative_him:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
his wife Pheobe Glynn's pronoun_genitive_his:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
he wife Pheobe Glynn's pronoun_nominative_he:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
who wife Pheobe Glynn's pronoun_nominative_who:name_genitive_nesting_left -1
_ wife Pheobe Glynn empty_no_case:name_plain_nesting_left 0.007613
Stephen Otis Jr.'s wife Pheobe Glynn name_genitive:name_plain_nesting_left -1
Stephen Otis Jr. wife Pheobe Glynn name_plain:name_plain_nesting_left -1
him wife Pheobe Glynn pronoun_accusative_him:name_plain_nesting_left -1
his wife Pheobe Glynn pronoun_genitive_his:name_plain_nesting_left 0.069577
he wife Pheobe Glynn pronoun_nominative_he:name_plain_nesting_left -1
who wife Pheobe Glynn pronoun_nominative_who:name_plain_nesting_left -1
her pronoun_accusative_him 0.004264
her pronoun_genitive_him 0.003459
she pronoun_nominative_he 0.004373
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.005834">[2:his wife Pheobe Glynn]</font>
, invented a safety device that prevented elevators from falling if the hoisting cable broke. 
[0:he]
 worked on this safety device while living in Yonkers, New York in 1852, and 
[0:_]
 then finally had a finished product in 1854.
<hr/>

[0:Georg Karl von Hevesy]
 (August 1, 1885 - July 5, 1966) was a Hungarian radiochemist and Nobel laureate, recognised in 1943 for 
[0:his]
 key role in the development of the tracer method where radioactive tracers are used to study chemical processes such as in the metabolism of animals.
<hr/>

[0:Giovanni Biagio Luppis von Rammer]
 or Ivan Lupis (August 27, 1813 - January 11, 1875) was an officer of the Austrian Navy, born in Rijeka (today in Croatia), 
[0:who]
 had the idea of the first self-propelled torpedo.
<hr/>

[0:Hedy Lamarr]
 (November 9, 1913 – January 19, 2000) was an Austrian-born American actress. Though known primarily for 
[0:her]
 great beauty and 
[0:her]
 successful film career, 
[0:she]
 also co-invented an early form of spread spectrum communications technology, a key to modern wireless communication.
<hr/>

[0:Henri Marie Coandă]
 (June 7, 1886 - November 25, 1972) (IPA: /ɐʁi maʁi kwandə/) was a Romanian inventor, aerodynamics pioneer and the builder of the world's first jet powered aircraft, the Coanda-1910. 
[0:he]
 gives 
[0:his]
 name to the Coandă effect.
<hr/>

[0:Hero]
 (or Heron) of Alexandria (Greek: Ήρων ο Αλεξανδρεύς) (c. 10–70 AD) was an ancient Greek mathematician and engineer 
[0:who]
 was active in Alexandria, Ptolemaic Egypt. 
[0:he]
 is considered the greatest experimenter of antiquity and 
[0:his]
 work is representative of the Hellenistic scientific tradition.

Among 
[0:his]
 most famous inventions were the first documented steam-powered device, the aeolipile, and a windwheel, constituting one of the earliest instances of wind harnessing. 
[0:he]
 is said to have been a follower of the Atomists. Some of 
[0:his]
 ideas were derived from the works of 
[1:Ctesibius]
.
<hr/>

[0:Ala al-Din Abu al-Hassan Ali ibn Abi-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Dimashqi]
 (Arabic: علاء الدين أبو الحسن عليّ بن أبي حزم القرشي الدمشقي ) (born 1213 CE - died 1288 CE / 687 AH), commonly known as Ibn al-Nafis (Arabic: ابن النفيس ), was an Arab Muslim polymath -- a physician, anatomist, physiologist, surgeon, ophthalmologist, Hafiz, Hadith scholar, Shafi`i jurist and lawyer, Sunni theologian, Islamic philosopher, logician, novelist, psychologist, sociologist, scientist, science fiction writer, astronomer, cosmologist, futurist, geologist, grammarian, linguist and historian -- 
[0:who]
 was born in Damascus, Syria, and 
[0:_]
 worked in Cairo, Egypt.

<font color="red" title="0:Ibn al-Nafis
_ empty_no_case 0.012722
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Ibn al-Nafis's name_genitive 0.000761
Ibn al-Nafis name_plain 0.07219
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.005693
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.023362
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.286013
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.017266">[0:he]</font>
 is most famous for being the first physician to describe the pulmonary circulation, and the capillary and coronary circulations, which form the basis of the circulatory system, for which 
[0:he]
 is considered the father of circulatory physiology and "the greatest physiologist of the Middle Ages." 
[0:he]
 was also an early proponent of experimental medicine, postmortem autopsy, and human dissection, 
<font color="red" title="0:_
_ empty_no_case 0.269625
Ala al-Din Abu al-Hassan Ali ibn Abi-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Dimashqi's name_genitive 0.000399
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Ibn al-Nafis name_plain 0.015417
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he pronoun_nominative_he 0.553716
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.006436">[0:he]</font>
 first described the concept of metabolism, and 
[0:_]
 developed 
[0:his]
 own new Nafisian systems of anatomy, physiology, psychology and pulsology to replace the Avicennian and Galenic doctrines, while discrediting many of their erroneous theories on the four humours, pulsation, bones, muscles, intestines, sensory organs, bilious canals, esophagus, stomach, and the anatomy of almost every other part of the human body. 
<font color="red" title="0:Ibn al-Nafis
_ empty_no_case 0.001676
Ala al-Din Abu al-Hassan Ali ibn Abi-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Dimashqi's name_genitive 0.000176
Ibn al-Nafis's name_genitive 0.000176
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 also drew diagrams to illustrate different body parts in 
[0:his]
 new physiological system.

Besides 
[0:his]
 medical contributions, 
[0:he]
 wrote works on the Islamic religious disciplines, notably A Short Account of the Methodology of Hadith, which introduces a more rational and logical classification for the science of hadith. 
[0:he]
 also wrote works on fictional Arabic literature, notably Theologus Autodidactus, a story which features a feral child, desert island and coming of age plot, through which 
[0:he]
 expressed many of 
[0:his]
 religious, philosophical and scientific themes on a wide variety of subjects. Both of these works were mainly an attempt by 
<font color="red" title="0:Ibn al-Nafis
_ empty_no_case 0.000152
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Ibn al-Nafis's name_genitive 0.008457
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.015583
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.023234
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.002057">[0:him]</font>
 at reconciling reason with revelation, both by highlighting the rationality of Islamic beliefs and by promoting the use of reason in the science of hadith.
<hr/>

[0:János Irinyi]
 (May 17, 1817 - December 17, 1895); [IPA: ja:noʃ iriɲi], sometimes also spelled János Irínyi) was a Hungarian chemist and inventor of the noiseless and non-explosive match. 
[0:he]
 achieved this by mixing the phosphorus with lead dioxide instead of the potassium chlorate used previously.

<font color="red" title="0:Irinyi
_ empty_no_case 0.005835
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Irinyi name_plain_short 0.398729
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000834
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.000302
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.515226
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000452">[0:he]</font>
 also took part in the 1848 Hungarian Revolution.
<hr/>

[0:James Henry Greathead]
 (6 August 1844 - 21 October 1896) was an engineer renowned for 
[0:his]
 work on the London Underground railway.
<hr/>

[0:Sir John Ambrose Fleming]
 (November 29, 1849 - April 18, 1945) was an English electrical engineer and physicist. 
[0:he]
 is known for inventing the first thermionic valve or vacuum tube, the diode, then called the kenotron in 1904. 
[0:he]
 also invented the right hand rule, used in mathematics and electronics. 
[0:he]
 was born the eldest of seven children of 
[1:James Fleming]
 DD (d. 1879), 
<font color="red" title="1:a Congregational minister
a Congregational minister common_plain 0.099721
_ empty_no_case 2.5e-05
James Fleming's name_genitive 0.002513
James Fleming name_plain 0.417805
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.00396
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.004685
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.001528
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.005257">[1:James Fleming]</font>
, and 
[2:his wife]
, 
[2:Mary Ann]
, at Lancaster, Lancashire and baptised on February 11 1850. 
[0:he]
 was a devout Christian and 
[0:_]
 preached on one occasion at St Martin-in-the-Fields in London on the topic of evidence for the resurrection. In 1932, along with 
[3:Douglas Dewar]
 and 
[4:Bernard Acworth]
, 
[0:he]
 helped establish the Evolution Protest Movement. Having no children, 
[0:he]
 bequeathed much of 
[0:his]
 estate to Christian charities, especially those that helped the poor. 
[0:he]
 was an accomplished photographer and, in addition, 
[0:he]
 painted watercolours and 
[0:_]
 enjoyed climbing in the Alps.
<hr/>

[0:John Logie Baird]
 (August 13 1888 - June 14 1946) was a Scottish engineer and inventor of the world's first working television system. Although 
<font color="red" title="0:Baird's
_ empty_no_case 0.000157
Baird's name_genitive_short 0.017276
John Logie Baird's name_genitive 0.008614
Baird name_plain_short 0.004338
John Logie Baird name_plain 0.002154
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001925
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.914978
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.01332
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.003695">[0:his]</font>
 electromechanical system was eventually displaced by purely electronic systems (such as those of 
[1:Vladimir Zworykin]
 and 
[2:Philo Farnsworth]
), 
[0:his]
 early successes demonstrating working television broadcasts and 
[0:his]
 colour and cinema television work earn 
[0:him]
 a prominent place in television's invention.

[0:Baird]
 was born in Helensburgh, Argyll, Scotland. 
[0:he]
 was educated at Larchfield Academy (now part of Lomond School), Helensburgh; the Glasgow and West of Scotland Technical College (which later became the University of Strathclyde); and the University of Glasgow. 
[0:his]
 degree course was interrupted by World War I and 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.473628
Baird's name_genitive_short 0.003999
John Logie Baird's name_genitive 0.002307
Baird name_plain_short 0.055677
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.003871
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.012331
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.38337
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.004374">[0:_]</font>
 never returned to graduate.
<hr/>

[0:John Loudon McAdam]
 (September 21, 1756 – November 26, 1836) was a Scottish engineer and road-builder. 
[0:he]
 invented a new process, "macadamisation", for building roads with a smooth hard surface that would be more durable and less muddy than soil-based tracks.

Modern road construction still reflects 
<font color="red" title="0:McAdam's
_ empty_no_case 0.000164
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John Loudon McAdam name_plain 0.015127
McAdam name_plain_short 0.013914
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.002706
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.553519
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.002608
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001005">[0:his]</font>
 influence. Of subsequent improvements, the most significant was the introduction of tar (originally coal tar) to bind the road surface's stones together – "tarmac" (for Tar Macadam) – followed later by the use of hot-laid tarred aggregate or tar-sprayed chippings to create better road metalling. More recently, oil-based asphalt laid on reinforced concrete has become a major road surface, but its use of granite or limestone chippings still recalls 
<font color="red" title="0:McAdam's
_ empty_no_case 0.000135
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McAdam's name_genitive_short 0.223141
John Loudon McAdam name_plain 0.003123
McAdam name_plain_short 0.011077
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.004936
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.618252
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.003099
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000423">[0:his]</font>
 innovation.
<hr/>

[0:John Napier of Merchistoun]
 (1550 - 4 April 1617) - also signed as Neper, Nepair - named Marvellous Merchiston, was a Scottish mathematician, physicist, astronomer/astrologer and 8th Laird of Merchistoun, son of 
[1:Sir Archibald Napier of Merchiston]
. 
[0:he]
 is most remembered as the inventor of logarithms and Napier's bones, and for popularizing the use of the decimal point. 
<font color="red" title="0:Napier's
_ empty_no_case 0.000169
John Napier of Merchistoun's name_genitive 0.021466
Napier's name_genitive_short 0.128141
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001213
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.757894
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.00649
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001206">[0:his]</font>
 birth place, Merchiston Tower, Edinburgh, Scotland, is now part of Napier University. After dying of gout, 
[0:Napier]
 was buried in St Cuthbert's Church, Edinburgh.
<hr/>

[0:Joseph Aspdin]
 (December? 1778 – 20 March 1855) was a British cement manufacturer 
[0:who]
 obtained the patent for Portland cement on 21 October 1824.

<font color="red" title="0:Joseph Aspdin
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.009955
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.015262
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.545753
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.007181">[0:he]</font>
 (or Aspden) was the eldest of the six children of 
[1:Thomas Aspdin]
, 
<font color="red" title="1:a bricklayer living in the Hunslet district of Leeds, Yorkshire
_ father's empty_no_case:common_genitive_nesting_left 4.6e-05
Aspdin's father's name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph Aspdin's father's name_genitive:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph's father's name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Aspdin father's name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph Aspdin father's name_plain:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph father's name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
him father's pronoun_accusative_him:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
his father's pronoun_genitive_his:common_genitive_nesting_left 7e-05
he father's pronoun_nominative_he:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
who father's pronoun_nominative_who:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
a bricklayer living in the Hunslet district of Leeds, Yorkshire common_plain 0.308964
_ empty_no_case 0.000295
Thomas Aspdin's name_genitive 0.000463
Thomas Aspdin name_plain 0.586949
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.00109
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.00199
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.000243
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.009245">[1:Thomas Aspdin]</font>
. 
[0:he]
 was baptized on Christmas Day, 1788. 
[0:he]
 entered 
<font color="red" title="1:his father's
_ father's empty_no_case:common_genitive_nesting_left 0.001013
Aspdin's father's name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph Aspdin's father's name_genitive:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph's father's name_genitive_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Aspdin father's name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph Aspdin father's name_plain:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
Joseph father's name_plain_short:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
him father's pronoun_accusative_him:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
his father's pronoun_genitive_his:common_genitive_nesting_left 0.018394
he father's pronoun_nominative_he:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
who father's pronoun_nominative_who:common_genitive_nesting_left -1
a bricklayer living in the Hunslet district of Leeds, Yorkshire common_plain 0.013511
_ empty_no_case 0.003037
Thomas Aspdin's name_genitive 0.070922
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.030077
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.416531
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.003176
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.007338">[1:his]</font>
 trade, and 
[0:_]
 married 
[2:Mary Fotherby]
 at Leeds Parish Church (the Parish Church of St Peter at Leeds) on 21 May 1811.

By 1817 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.092695
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.001509
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.224489
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.00043">[0:Aspdin]</font>
 had set up in business on 
[0:his]
 own in central Leeds. 
[0:he]
 must have experimented with cement manufacture during the next few years, because on 21 October 1824 
[0:he]
 was granted the British Patent BP 5022 entitled An Improvement in the Mode of Producing an Artificial Stone, in which 
[0:he]
 coined the term "Portland cement" by analogy with the Portland stone, an oolitic limestone that is quarried on the channel coast of England, on the Isle of Portland in Dorset. See below for the text of the patent.

Almost immediately after this, in 1825, in partnership with 
<font color="red" title="3:a Leeds neighbour
a Leeds neighbour common_plain 0.387023
_ empty_no_case 3.2e-05
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William Beverley name_plain 0.506239
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.000315
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.000344
he pronoun_nominative_he 6.7e-05
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000476">[3:William Beverley]</font>
, 
[3:William Beverley]
, 
<font color="red" title="0:he
_ empty_no_case 0.004646
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Joseph Aspdin's name_genitive 0.000475
Joseph's name_genitive_short 0.003317
Aspdin name_plain_short 0.496051
Joseph Aspdin name_plain 0.024992
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him pronoun_accusative_him 0.001988
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.003829
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.451031
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000861">[0:Joseph]</font>
 set up a production plant for this product in Kirkgate, Wakefield. 
[3:Beverley]
 stayed in Leeds, but 
[0:Aspdin]
 and 
[0:his]
 family moved to Wakefield (about 9 miles away) at this point. 
[0:he]
 obtained a second patent, for a method of making lime, in 1825. The Kirkgate plant was closed in 1838 after compulsory purchase of the land by the Manchester and Leeds Railway Company, and the site was cleared. 
[0:he]
 moved 
[0:his]
 equipment to a second site nearby in Kirkgate.

At this time 
[4:his eldest son]
[4:James]
 was working as an accountant in Leeds, and 
[5:his younger son]
, 
[5:William]
, was running the plant. However, in 1841, 
<font color="red" title="0:Joseph
_ empty_no_case 0.009895
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who pronoun_nominative_who 0.001881">[0:he]</font>
 went into partnership with 
[4:James]
, and 
[0:_]
 posted a notice that 
[5:William]
 had left, and that the company would not be responsible for 
[5:his]
 debts. It can be assumed that 
<font color="red" title="5:William
_ younger son empty_no_case:common_plain_nesting_left 1.6e-05
Aspdin's younger son name_genitive_short:common_plain_nesting_left 3.3e-05
Joseph Aspdin's younger son name_genitive:common_plain_nesting_left 4.1e-05
Joseph's younger son name_genitive_short:common_plain_nesting_left 3.3e-05
Aspdin younger son name_plain_short:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Joseph Aspdin younger son name_plain:common_plain_nesting_left -1
Joseph younger son name_plain_short:common_plain_nesting_left -1
him younger son pronoun_accusative_him:common_plain_nesting_left -1
his younger son pronoun_genitive_his:common_plain_nesting_left 0.000162
he younger son pronoun_nominative_he:common_plain_nesting_left -1
who younger son pronoun_nominative_who:common_plain_nesting_left -1
_ empty_no_case 0.000539
William's name_genitive_short 0.003022
William name_plain_short 0.142142
him pronoun_accusative_him 0.002775
his pronoun_genitive_his 0.003572
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.774175
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000578">[5:he]</font>
 developed 
[5:his]
 modifications leading to “modern” Portland cement around the time of 
[5:his]
 departure. In 1844 
[0:Joseph]
 retired, transferring 
[0:his]
 share of the business to 
[4:James]
. 
[4:James]
 moved to a third site at Ings Road in 1848, and this plant continued in operation until 1900. 
<font color="red" title="0:Joseph Aspdin
_ empty_no_case 0.006861
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Joseph Aspdin name_plain 0.046634
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his pronoun_genitive_his 0.016851
he pronoun_nominative_he 0.410544
who pronoun_nominative_who 0.000783">[0:Aspdin]</font>
 died on 20 March 1855, at home in Wakefield.
<hr/>

[0:Joseph Constantine Carpue]
 (May 4, 1764 – January 30, 1846) was an English surgeon 
[0:who]
 was born in London. 
[0:he]
 was associated with St. George's Hospital and Duke of York Hospital in Chelsea. 
[0:he]
 was a skilled surgeon and popular lecturer of anatomy.

[0:Carpue]
 is known for performing the first rhinoplastic surgery in England, using a technique created in India several centuries earlier. The Indian rhinoplastic reconstruction involved using a flap of skin taken from the forehead, and was to become known in Europe as Carpue's operation. In 1816 
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 described the procedure in 
[0:his]
 publication of Account of Two Successful Operations for Restoring a Lost Nose from the Integument of the Forehead.

[0:Carpue]
 was also a pioneer involving experimentation with electricity in medicine, which 
[0:he]
 details in 
[0:his]
 treatise of An Introduction to Electricity and Galvanism, with Cases showing their Effects in the Cure of Disease.
<hr/>

[0:Katharine Burr Blodgett]
 (January 10, 1898–October 12, 1979) was the first woman to get 
[0:her]
 Ph.D. in Physics from University of Cambridge in 1926. After receiving 
[0:her]
 master's degree, 
[0:she]
 was hired by General Electric, where 
[0:she]
 invented low-reflectance glass or so called "invisible glass".
<hr/>

[0:Margaret Ethridge Knight]
 (February 14, 1838 - October 12, 1914) was an American inventor. 
[0:she]
 was born in York, Maine to 
[1:James Knight]
 and 
[2:Hannah Teal]
. A cotton mill worker from the age of nine through 
[0:her]
 56. In 1868, while living in Springfield, Massachusetts, 
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 invented a machine that folded and glued paper to form the brown paper bags familiar to shoppers today.

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 built a wooden model of the device, but 
[0:_]
 needed a working iron model to apply for a patent. [3:Charles Annan], 
[3:who]
 was in the machine shop where 
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 iron model was being built, stole 
[0:her]
 design and 
[3:_]
 patented the device. 
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 filed a successful patent interference lawsuit and 
[0:_]
 was awarded the patent in 1873. With 
[4:a Massachusetts business man]
, 
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 established the Eastern Paper Bag Co. and 
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 received royalties.

Other inventions included a numbering machine, window frame and sash- patented in 1894 and several devices relating to rotary engines, patented between 1902 and 1915 according to Encyclopedia Britannica, 2005. 
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 original box-making machine is in the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C. 
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 never married and 
[0:_]
 died on October 12, 1914 at the age of 76. A plaque is on the Curry Cottage at 287 Hollis St in Framingham recognizing 
[0:her]
 as the "first woman awarded a U.S. patent" and holder of 87 U.S. patents. However, 
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 was not actually the first: the first female patent-holder was [5:Mary Kies], 
[5:who]
 patented a weaving process in 1809.
<hr/>

[0:Joseph-Michel Montgolfier]
 (26 August 1740 – 26 June 1810) and 
[1:Jacques-Étienne Montgolfier]
 (6 January 1745 – 2 August 1799) were the inventors of the montgolfière, globe aèrostatique or airship. 
[0,1:the brothers]
 succeeded in launching the first manned ascent, carrying a young physician and an audacious army officer into the sky. Later, in December 1783 in recognition of 
[0,1:their]
 achievement, 
[2:their father Pierre]
 was elevated to the nobility and the hereditary appellation of de Montgolfier by 
[3:King Louis XVI of France]
.
<hr/>

[0:Al-Khwarizmi]
 (Muḥammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī محمد بن موسى الخوارزمي) was a Persian mathematician, astronomer, astrologer and geographer. 
[0:he]
 was born around 780 in Khwārizm, then part of the Persian Empire (now Khiva, Uzbekistan) and 
[0:_]
 died around 850. 
[0:he]
 worked most of 
[0:his]
 life as a scholar in the House of Wisdom in Baghdad.

[0:his]
 Algebra was the first book on the systematic solution of linear and quadratic equations. Consequently 
[0:he]
 is considered to be the father of algebra, a title 
[0:he]
 shares with 
[1:Diophantus]
. Latin translations of 
[0:his]
 Arithmetic, on the Indian numerals, introduced the decimal positional number system to the Western world in the twelfth century. 
[0:he]
 revised and updated 
[2:Ptolemy's]
 Geography as well as writing several works on astronomy and astrology.

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 contributions not only made a great impact on mathematics, but on language as well. The word algebra is derived from al-jabr, one of the two operations used to solve quadratic equations, as described in 
[0:his]
 book.
<hr/>

[0:Joseph Nicéphore Niépce]
 (March 7, 1765 - July 5, 1833) was a French inventor, most noted as the inventor of photography and a pioneer in the field. 
[0:he]
 is well-known for taking some of the earliest photographs, dating to the 1820s.
<hr/>

[0:Philip H. Diehl]
 (29 January 1847 - 7 April 1913) was a German-American engineer and inventor 
[0:who]
 held several U.S. patents, including electric incandescent lamps, electric motors for sewing machines and other uses, and ceiling fans. 
<font color="red" title="0:Diehl
_ empty_no_case 0.003041
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 was a contemporary of 
[1:Thomas Edison]
 and 
[0:his]
 inventions caused 
[1:Edison]
 to reduce the price of 
[1:his]
 incandescent bulb.
<hr/>

[0:Rachel Fuller Brown]
 (November 23, 1898 - January 14, 1980) was an American scientist.

<font color="red" title="0:she
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 was born in Springfield, Massachusetts. 
[0:she]
 received 
[0:her]
 Bachelor of Arts in history and chemistry from Mount Holyoke College in 1920. 
[0:she]
 received 
[0:her]
 PhD in organic chemistry and bacteriology in 1933 from the University of Chicago.

[0:Brown]
 collaborated with 
[1:Elizabeth Lee Hazen]
 through postal mail to develop the first useful antifungal antibiotic, nystatin. 
<font color="red" title="0:Brown
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 and 
[1:Hazen]
 donated all nystatin royalties (more than $13 million) to the nonprofit Research Corporation.

<font color="red" title="0:she
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 was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 1994.
<hr/>

[0:Ralph H. Baer]
 (born March 8, 1922) is a German-born American inventor, noted for 
[0:his]
 many contributions to games and the video game industry. In 2006, 
[0:he]
 was awarded the National Medal of Technology for inventing the home console for video games and spawning the video game industry.
<hr/>

[0:Robert Hooke, FRS]
 (18 July 1635 – 3 March 1703) was an English natural philosopher and polymath 
[0:who]
 played an important role in the scientific revolution, through both experimental and theoretical work.

[0:Hooke]
 is known principally for 
[0:his]
 law of elasticity (Hooke's Law). 
[0:he]
 is also remembered for 
[0:his]
 work as "the father of microscopy" -- it was 
<font color="red" title="0:Hooke
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 who coined the term "cell" to describe the basic unit of life -- 
[0:he]
 also assisted 
[1:Robert Boyle]
 and 
[0:_]
 built the vacuum pumps used in 
[1:Boyle's]
 gas law experiments. 
<font color="red" title="0:Hooke
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 was an important architect of 
[0:his]
 time, and a chief surveyor to the City of London after the Great Fire, 
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 built some of the earliest Gregorian telescopes, 
[0:_]
 observed the rotations of Mars and Jupiter, and 
[0:_]
 was an early proponent of the theory of evolution through 
[0:his]
 observations of microscopic fossils. 
[0:he]
 investigated the phenomenon of refraction, deducing the wave theory of light, and 
[0:_]
 was the first to suggest that matter expands when heated and that air is made of small particles separated by relatively large distances. 
[0:he]
 also deduced from experiments that gravity follows an inverse square law, and that such a relation governs the motions of the planets, an idea which was subsequently developed by 
<font color="red" title="2:Newton
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. Much of 
[0:Hooke's]
 work was conducted in 
[0:his]
 capacity as curator of experiments of the Royal Society, a post 
[0:he]
 held from 1662.

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 was, by all accounts, a remarkably industrious man, and 
[0:_]
 was at one time simultaneously the curator of the Royal Society and a member of its council, Gresham Professor of Geometry and Chief Surveyor to the City of London.

<font color="red" title="0:Hooke's
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 reputation was largely forgotten during the eighteenth century, and this is popularly attributed to a dispute with 
<font color="red" title="2:Isaac Newton
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 over credit for 
[0:his]
 work on gravitation; 
[2:Newton]
, as President of the Royal Society, did much to obscure 
[0:Hooke]
, including, it is said, destroying (or failing to preserve) the only known portrait of 
[0:the man]
. 
<font color="red" title="0:Hooke's
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 reputation was revived during the twentieth century through studies of 
[3:Robert Gunther]
 and 
[4:Margaret 'Espinasse]
, and after a long period of relative obscurity 
[0:he]
 is now recognised as one of the most important scientists of 
[0:his]
 age.
<hr/>

[0:Heinrich Hermann Robert Koch]
 (December 11 1843 – May 27 1910) was a German physician. 
[0:he]
 became famous for isolating Bacillus anthracis (1877), the tuberculosis bacillus (1882) and the vibrio cholera (1883) and for 
[0:his]
 development of Koch's postulates.

[0:he]
 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 
[0:his]
 tuberculosis findings in 1905. 
[0:he]
 is considered one of the founders of microbiology — 
[0:he]
 inspired such major figures as 
[1:Paul Ehrlich]
 and 
[2:Gerhard Domagk]
.
<hr/>
</body></html>
